Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

16 Sentences With "rationed out"

How to use rationed out in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "rationed out" and check conjugation/comparative form for "rationed out". Mastering all the usages of "rationed out" from sentence examples published by news publications.

So how is the limited capacity rationed out between airlines?
Note, though, that this credit is rationed out to just $22 per month.
Expect more information to be rationed out the next few days of the summit.
Leave days rationed out by the computer, hoarded for a vain flicker of freedom.
The leftover money was rationed out to buy a small car and for a deposit on an apartment.
While there are dozens of male rappers whose music stays in rotation during any given period of time, mainstream woman rappers appear to be rationed out one or two at a time.
The ways technology-as-object operates within the story (rationed out in nursing homes, final registration as a fiddly part of hospice paperwork) suggests a cautious oddness without undercutting the human drama.
Managers at a hedge fund in Manhattan spent hundreds of dollars on hand sanitizer, and plan to keep a log of what is rationed out to employees — and the rest locked up.
"Glitch" is an entirely different kind of series, a large-ensemble drama predicated on big fuzzy ideas about life, death and destiny in which the separate back stories of multiple characters are rationed out in frequent flashbacks.
The cycle of waking up every day, taking the single transit token rationed out alongside breakfast at programs like OOTC, heading to the next shelter, sleeping (most of the times in the streets), and doing it all over again becomes routine.
While he gave control of the church to Serra, Portolá controlled the living quarters and rationed out food to the friars, charging their costs to the mission.Maynard Geiger. The Life and Times of Fray Junípero Serra: The Man Who Never Turned Back. Academy of American Franciscan History, 1959, vol. 1, p. 192.
Death is followed by a period of 'half-life', a short amount of time which can be rationed out over long periods in which the dead can be revived—so that, potentially, they can 'live' on for a long time. When attempts to bring back important businessman Louis Sarapis fail, it's clearly more than mere negligence. Sure enough, Sarapis starts speaking from beyond the grave. From outer space, in fact.
They set up residence for about two weeks in stone bothys. Working in pairs, the men take the fledglings from their nests with poles, catching them around the neck with a rope noose, then killing the birds with a blow to the head. They bring home their catch to meet an eager crowd of customers. The demand is often so great that the birds have to be rationed out to ensure that each person does not go without a taste of guga.
The film depicts two days in the lives of four Chicago real estate salesmen who are supplied with leads — the names and phone numbers of prospects — and use deceitful and dubious tactics to make sales. Many of the leads rationed out by office manager John Williamson (Spacey) lack either the money or the desire to actually invest in land. Blake (Baldwin) is sent by Mitch and Murray, the owners of Premiere Properties, to motivate the sales team. Blake unleashes a torrent of verbal abuse on the salesmen and announces that only the top two will be allowed access to the more promising Glengarry leads.
Value of land and buildings in the UK from 1995 to 2016 (trillions). The Economist has criticised green belt policy, saying that unless more houses are built through reforming planning laws and releasing green belt land, then housing space will need to be rationed out. In March 2014, it was noted that if general inflation had risen as fast as housing prices had since 1971, a chicken would cost £51; and that Britain is "building less homes today than at any point since the 1920s". According to the independent Institute of Economic Affairs, there is "overwhelming empirical evidence that that planning restrictions have a substantial impact on housing costs" and are the main reason why housing is two and a half times more expensive in 2011 than it was in 1975.
A semi-detached house for sale in London zone 5 (Croydon) in 2007 An analysis by the LSE and the Dutch Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis found that house prices in England would have been 35% cheaper without regulatory constraints. A report by the Adam Smith Institute found that by using 4% of London's green belt, one million homes could be built within 10 minutes walk of a railway station. The Economist has criticised green belt policy, saying that unless more houses are built through reforming planning laws and releasing green belt land, then housing space will need to be rationed out. It noted that if general inflation had risen as fast as housing prices had since 1971, a chicken would cost £51; and that Britain is "building less homes today than at any point since the 1920s".

No results under this filter, show 16 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.